| drop p. |
instrumental percussion in which the plexor is allowed to fall by its own weight on to the pleximeter, the elements considered in the examination being the sound heard, the vibrations felt in the handle of the plexor, and the rebound of the plexor seen. Called also Lerch's p.
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| drop s. |
depression of one shoulder below the level of the other.
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| drop-foot g. |
steppage g.
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| dropacism |
the removal of hairs by means of a plaster or wax.
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| droperidol |
[USP] a drug of the butyrophenone series, used for its antianxiety, sedative, and antiemetic effects as a premedication prior to surgery and during induction and maintenance of anesthesia, for the prophylaxis of postoperative nausea and vomiting, and to produce conscious sedation; administered intravenously or intramuscularly. A combination of droperidol and fentanyl citrate is administered intramuscularly to produce neuroleptanalgesia.
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